4.8 Article

Tail nerve electrical stimulation promoted the efficiency of transplanted spinal cord-like tissue as a neuronal relay to repair the motor function of rats with transected spinal cord injury

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 297, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2023.122103

Keywords

Synergistic electrical stimulation; Spinal cord-like tissue; Transplantation; Transected spinal cord injury; Voluntary motor function recovery

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In this study, a rat model of spinal cord injury was used to evaluate the effects of neural stem cell-derived spinal cord-like tissue (SCLT) transplantation and tail nerve electrical stimulation (TNES) on nerve conduction recovery and voluntary movement in rats. TNES promoted axon regeneration and remyelination, improved neural transmission efficiency, and enhanced muscle function and metabolism. The combination of SCLT and TNES could potentially offer a breakthrough in restoring voluntary movement and muscle control for spinal cord injury patients.
Following transected spinal cord injury (SCI), there is a critical need to restore nerve conduction at the injury site and activate the silent neural circuits caudal to the injury to promote the recovery of voluntary movement. In this study, we generated a rat model of SCI, constructed neural stem cell (NSC)-derived spinal cord-like tissue (SCLT), and evaluated its ability to replace injured spinal cord and repair nerve conduction in the spinal cord as a neuronal relay. The lumbosacral spinal cord was further activated with tail nerve electrical stimulation (TNES) as a synergistic electrical stimulation to better receive the neural information transmitted by the SCLT. Next, we investigated the neuromodulatory mechanism underlying the action of TNES and its synergism with SCLT in SCI repair. TNES promoted the regeneration and remyelination of axons and increased the proportion of gluta-matergic neurons in SCLT to transmit brain-derived neural information more efficiently to the caudal spinal cord. TNES also increased the innervation of motor neurons to hindlimb muscle and improved the microenvironment of muscle tissue, resulting in effective prevention of hindlimb muscle atrophy and enhanced muscle mitochon-drial energy metabolism. Tracing of the neural circuits of the sciatic nerve and tail nerve identified the mech-anisms responsible for the synergistic effects of SCLT transplantation and TNES in activating central pattern generator (CPG) neural circuits and promoting voluntary motor function recovery in rats. The combination of SCLT and TNES is expected to provide a new breakthrough for patients with SCI to restore voluntary movement and control their muscles.

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